What is Rituximab? Rituximab (brand name Rituxan) is a monoclonal antibody that targets CD20, a protein found on the surface of B-cells (a type of white blood cell). It's used to treat B-cell lymphomas (including non-Hodgkin lymphoma) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Rituximab revolutionized lymphoma treatment when it was introduced - adding it to chemotherapy dramatically improved cure rates. It works by marking cancer cells for destruction by the immune system and can also kill cells directly.
Drug Class
Anti-CD20 Antibody
Target
CD20 on B-cells
Route
IV Infusion
FDA Approved
1997
How Rituximab Works
Rituximab represents a major advance in cancer treatment - using the body's immune system to fight cancer:
Understanding CD20
- CD20 protein: Found on the surface of B-cells (B-lymphocytes) throughout most of their development
- B-cell cancers: Most B-cell lymphomas and leukemias retain CD20 on their surface
- Normal B-cells also affected: Rituximab kills normal B-cells too, but the body regenerates them after treatment
- Not on stem cells: Blood-forming stem cells don't have CD20, so they survive and can make new B-cells
Triple Mechanism of Action
How Rituximab Kills Cancer Cells:
- Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC):
- Rituximab binds to CD20 on cancer cell surface
- The antibody "tail" (Fc region) recruits immune cells (NK cells, macrophages)
- These immune cells recognize the antibody tag and kill the marked cell
- Think of it like putting a "wanted" poster on cancer cells
- Complement-Dependent Cytotoxicity (CDC):
- Rituximab binding activates the complement system (proteins in blood that help fight infection)
- Complement proteins form a "membrane attack complex"
- This punches holes in the cancer cell membrane → cell death
- Direct Apoptosis (Cell Suicide):
- CD20 binding can directly trigger programmed cell death
- Less well understood mechanism but contributes to overall effect
Synergy with Chemotherapy
Rituximab works even better when combined with chemotherapy:
- Chemotherapy sensitization: Makes cancer cells more vulnerable to immune attack
- Different mechanisms: Chemotherapy kills dividing cells directly; rituximab uses immune system
- Cure rate improvements: Adding rituximab to CHOP (R-CHOP) improved cure rates for DLBCL from 40-50% to 60-70%
What is Rituximab Used For?
FDA-Approved Oncology Uses
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL)
- Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL):
- First-line: R-CHOP regimen (rituximab + cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone)
- Most common type of aggressive lymphoma
- Often curable with R-CHOP
- Follicular Lymphoma:
- First-line with chemotherapy (R-CHOP, R-CVP, R-bendamustine)
- Maintenance therapy after initial treatment (given every 2-3 months for 2 years)
- Single agent for relapsed/refractory disease
- Other B-cell NHL subtypes:
- Marginal zone lymphoma
- Small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL)
- Mantle cell lymphoma (with chemotherapy)
- Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
- First-line: Combined with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide (FCR regimen) for young, fit patients
- Or with: Bendamustine, chlorambucil (for older/less fit patients)
- Note: Newer targeted therapies (BTK inhibitors, BCL-2 inhibitors) increasingly used instead
Non-Oncology Uses
- Rheumatoid arthritis (moderate-to-severe, after TNF inhibitor failure)
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA)
- Microscopic polyangiitis (MPA)
How is Rituximab Given?
Premedication - REQUIRED!
Mandatory Premedication Before EVERY Infusion:
Given 30-60 minutes before rituximab to prevent infusion reactions:
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol): 650-1000 mg orally
- Diphenhydramine (Benadryl): 50 mg IV or orally (antihistamine)
- Sometimes added:
- Corticosteroid (prednisone or methylprednisolone) for high tumor burden
- Additional antihistamine (H2-blocker like famotidine)
Never skip premedication - it significantly reduces infusion reaction risk.
Standard Dosing
R-CHOP Regimen for DLBCL
21-Day Cycle (Day 1 of each cycle):
- Rituximab: 375 mg/m² IV day 1
- Cyclophosphamide: 750 mg/m² IV day 1
- Doxorubicin (Hydroxydaunorubicin): 50 mg/m² IV day 1
- Vincristine (Oncovin): 1.4 mg/m² IV day 1 (max 2 mg)
- Prednisone: 100 mg orally days 1-5
- Total cycles: Usually 6 cycles (some patients 8)
- Duration: ~4-5 months total
Follicular Lymphoma
- With chemotherapy: 375 mg/m² IV on day 1 of each chemotherapy cycle
- Maintenance therapy (after initial treatment):
- 375 mg/m² IV every 2-3 months
- Duration: Up to 2 years
- Significantly extends progression-free survival
- Single agent: 375 mg/m² IV weekly for 4-8 weeks
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
- FCR regimen:
- Cycle 1: Rituximab 375 mg/m² IV day 1
- Cycles 2-6: Rituximab 500 mg/m² IV day 1
- With fludarabine and cyclophosphamide
- 28-day cycles, total 6 cycles
Infusion Administration
First Infusion (Most Critical):
- Start SLOW: Begin at 50 mg/hour
- Gradual increase: If no reaction, increase by 50 mg/hour every 30 minutes
- Maximum rate: 400 mg/hour
- Total time: Usually 4-6 hours for first dose
- Close monitoring: Vital signs every 15-30 minutes; nurse at bedside
Subsequent Infusions (if first dose tolerated):
- Start at: 100 mg/hour
- Increase: By 100 mg/hour every 30 minutes if tolerated
- Maximum: 400 mg/hour
- Total time: Often 2-4 hours
- Faster options available: Some patients can receive 90-minute infusion after first cycle
Subcutaneous Formulation
- Rituxan Hycela: Subcutaneous injection (under the skin) - much faster
- Who can get it: Only after first full IV infusion without severe reaction
- Fixed dose: 1,400 mg (regardless of weight) + hyaluronidase
- Time: 5-7 minute injection vs. 2-6 hour infusion
- Approved for: Follicular lymphoma, DLBCL, CLL
- Benefit: Much more convenient for maintenance therapy
Side Effects and Management
BLACK BOX WARNINGS - Serious and Potentially Fatal Reactions:
- Infusion reactions: Can be severe or fatal, especially with first infusion
- Tumor lysis syndrome: Massive cell death releases chemicals into blood
- Severe mucocutaneous reactions: Skin reactions including Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML): Rare fatal brain infection
- Hepatitis B reactivation: Can cause fulminant hepatitis, liver failure, death
1. Infusion Reactions - MOST COMMON, ESPECIALLY FIRST DOSE
Incidence and Timing:
- First infusion: 50-80% experience some reaction (usually mild-moderate)
- Subsequent infusions: <10% (much lower)
- Timing: Usually within first 30-120 minutes of infusion, especially first infusion
- Severity: Most are mild-moderate (grade 1-2); severe reactions in ~10% of first infusions
- Fever, chills, rigors (shaking)
- Flushing, rash, itching
- Nausea, headache
- Throat tightness, cough
- Dizziness, lightheadedness
- Severe reactions: Shortness of breath, wheezing, chest tightness, severe hypotension, angioedema
- Mild-moderate: Pause infusion, give additional antihistamines, acetaminophen, fluids. Resume at slower rate
- Severe: Stop infusion immediately. Give epinephrine, corticosteroids, oxygen, IV fluids. May require ICU
- Prevention: Premedication, slow initial infusion rate, close monitoring
2. Tumor Lysis Syndrome (TLS)
Life-Threatening Emergency - Most Common in CLL and High Tumor Burden:
- What it is: Rapid destruction of cancer cells releases contents into bloodstream
- Results: High potassium, high phosphate, high uric acid, low calcium → kidney failure, cardiac arrhythmias, seizures
- Highest risk:
- CLL with high white blood cell count (>25,000)
- Bulky lymphoma (large tumor masses)
- First dose of rituximab
- Prevention:
- Aggressive IV hydration before and during treatment
- Allopurinol or rasburicase (lowers uric acid)
- Frequent lab monitoring (every 4-6 hours for high-risk patients)
- Sometimes hospitalization for first dose
- Symptoms: Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, muscle cramps, decreased urination, confusion, seizures, irregular heartbeat
3. Immunosuppression and Infections
- B-cell depletion: Rituximab destroys both cancerous and normal B-cells
- Duration: B-cells typically depleted for 6-12 months after last dose
- Infection risk: Increased susceptibility to bacterial, viral, fungal infections
- Common infections:
- Respiratory infections (pneumonia, sinusitis)
- Urinary tract infections
- Viral reactivations (see below)
- Prevention:
- PCP prophylaxis (Bactrim) if also receiving chemotherapy
- Monitor immunoglobulin levels (IgG)
- IVIG (IV immunoglobulin) if severe hypogammaglobulinemia and recurrent infections
- Avoid live vaccines during treatment and for 12 months after
4. Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) Reactivation
Can Be Fatal - Screening Mandatory Before Starting:
- Risk: Patients with current or past HBV infection can have virus reactivate → fulminant hepatitis, liver failure, death
- Required screening: HBsAg and anti-HBc testing BEFORE starting rituximab
- If positive:
- Consult hepatology
- Start antiviral prophylaxis (entecavir or tenofovir) BEFORE rituximab
- Continue antivirals during treatment and for 12+ months after
- Monitor liver function tests and HBV DNA levels
- Symptoms of reactivation: Fatigue, jaundice (yellowing), dark urine, abdominal pain, nausea
5. Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML)
- What it is: Rare, usually fatal brain infection caused by JC virus (dormant virus in ~50% of people)
- Incidence: Very rare (<1 in 25,000 patients)
- Risk factors: Severe immunosuppression, prior rituximab exposure
- Symptoms:
- Progressive confusion, personality changes
- Weakness on one side of body
- Vision changes
- Difficulty speaking or walking
- Loss of coordination
- Action: ANY new neurologic symptoms → immediately notify oncologist. MRI and lumbar puncture to diagnose
- No effective treatment: Stop rituximab immediately. Supportive care only
6. Cardiac Effects
- Arrhythmias: Can occur during infusion, especially if pre-existing heart disease
- Heart failure exacerbation: Rare, more common when combined with anthracyclines (doxorubicin in R-CHOP)
- Monitoring: Cardiac monitoring during infusion if known heart disease
7. Other Side Effects
- Neutropenia (low white blood cells):
- Common, especially with chemotherapy
- Late-onset neutropenia can occur 4-6 months after last dose
- G-CSF may be needed
- Fatigue (30-40%): Can persist for months
- Nausea (20-30%): Usually mild
- Headache (15-20%)
- Anemia, thrombocytopenia: More from chemotherapy than rituximab
- Skin reactions (rare): Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis (both can be fatal)
Rituximab Does NOT Cause:
- Hair loss (but CHOP chemotherapy does)
- Nausea (except during infusion reactions)
- Peripheral neuropathy (but vincristine in CHOP does)
Monitoring During Treatment
Before Starting Rituximab
| Test | Purpose | Action if Abnormal |
|---|---|---|
| HBsAg, anti-HBc | Screen for hepatitis B | If positive, start antiviral prophylaxis |
| CBC with differential | Baseline blood counts | May delay if severe cytopenias |
| Comprehensive metabolic panel | Kidney/liver function, electrolytes | Optimize before starting |
| LDH, uric acid | Tumor lysis syndrome risk assessment | Prophylaxis if elevated |
During Infusion
- Vital signs: Every 15-30 minutes (more frequent for first infusion)
- Continuous observation: Nurse monitoring for reaction symptoms
- Emergency equipment available: Epinephrine, oxygen, crash cart
Between Treatments
- CBC: Before each cycle (monitor for cytopenias)
- If high TLS risk: Electrolytes, uric acid, LDH every 4-6 hours after first dose
- If HBV positive: LFTs and HBV DNA every 1-3 months
- Immunoglobulin levels: If recurrent infections develop
How Well Does Rituximab Work?
Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma - Revolutionary Impact
R-CHOP vs. CHOP - Landmark Trials:
- GELA Study (LNH-98.5):
- 5-year overall survival: 58% (R-CHOP) vs. 45% (CHOP alone)
- Event-free survival: 47% vs. 29%
- Impact: Improved cure rate by ~15-20 percentage points
- Current outcomes: ~60-70% of DLBCL patients cured with R-CHOP
- Legacy: R-CHOP became THE standard and has remained so for 20+ years
Follicular Lymphoma
Multiple Proven Benefits:
- First-line with chemotherapy: Overall response rate 90-95%
- Maintenance therapy benefit (PRIMA trial):
- Median PFS: 10.5 years (with rituximab maintenance) vs. 4.1 years (observation)
- Duration: 2 years of maintenance (every 2 months)
- Single agent for relapsed disease: Response rate 40-50%
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
- FCR regimen:
- Complete response rate: ~70% (vs. ~20-30% with FC alone)
- Median PFS: 6-7 years in young, fit patients
- Some patients achieve MRD-negative CR (minimal residual disease negative - essentially no detectable leukemia)
- Note: Increasingly replaced by BTK inhibitors and BCL-2 inhibitors (less toxic, often more effective)
Other Lymphomas
- Mantle cell lymphoma: Improved outcomes when added to chemotherapy; maintenance shows benefit
- Marginal zone lymphoma: High response rates, often used as single agent
- Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia: Effective alone or with chemotherapy
How Long is Treatment?
Duration Varies by Disease and Setting
DLBCL (R-CHOP)
- Standard: 6 cycles (one dose of rituximab per cycle)
- High-risk disease: Sometimes 8 cycles
- Duration: ~4-5 months
- After completion: No maintenance; observe
Follicular Lymphoma
- Initial treatment: 6-8 cycles with chemotherapy (4-6 months)
- Maintenance: 375 mg/m² every 2-3 months for 2 years (total ~12-16 additional doses)
- Total duration: ~2.5 years from start to finish
CLL (FCR)
- Duration: 6 cycles (28-day cycles = 6 months)
- No maintenance in CLL
Single Agent
- Weekly for 4 weeks: For some indications (then observe or repeat)
- Every 2-3 months: Maintenance therapy
Drug Interactions and Precautions
Important Considerations
- Live vaccines: AVOID during treatment and for 12 months after last dose
- This includes: MMR, varicella, shingles (Zostavax - live version), yellow fever, nasal flu vaccine
- Killed vaccines okay but may be less effective (get before treatment if possible)
- Immunosuppressants: Rituximab adds to immunosuppression from chemotherapy → increased infection risk
- Antihypertensives: May need to hold before infusion if risk of hypotension
- No major CYP450 interactions: Antibodies aren't metabolized by liver enzymes
Special Populations
- Pregnancy: Category C - can cross placenta, may cause fetal B-cell depletion. Avoid if possible; contraception recommended
- Breastfeeding: May be present in milk. Discuss risks/benefits with oncologist
- Elderly: Same efficacy; monitor cardiac status closely during infusion
- Renal/hepatic impairment: No dose adjustment needed (not metabolized by liver/kidneys)
Cost and Insurance Coverage
Medication Cost
- Rituximab (Rituxan): $4,000-8,000 per dose (varies by dose/body surface area)
- Biosimilars: Rituxan Hycela (SC), Ruxience, Truxima (15-35% less expensive)
- Per cycle (R-CHOP): ~$8,000-12,000 for all drugs
- Total treatment cost (6 cycles R-CHOP): $50,000-100,000+
- Maintenance therapy (2 years): $60,000-120,000+
Insurance Coverage
- Coverage: Well-covered for FDA-approved indications
- Prior authorization: Usually required
- Biosimilar preference: Many insurers require biosimilar if available
Financial Assistance
- Genentech Patient Foundation: 1-888-941-3331 (for uninsured/underinsured)
- Genentech Co-pay Assistance: For patients with commercial insurance
- Biosimilar manufacturer programs: Available for Ruxience, Truxima
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society: 1-800-955-4572 (copay assistance)
- CancerCare: 1-866-552-6729
Biosimilars
FDA-Approved Rituximab Biosimilars:
- Ruxience (rituximab-pvvr): FDA-approved 2019
- Truxima (rituximab-abbs): FDA-approved 2018
- Riabni (rituximab-arrx): FDA-approved 2020
- What they are: Highly similar to Rituxan with no clinically meaningful differences
- Same effectiveness and safety: Extensive testing confirms bioequivalence
- Cost savings: 15-35% less expensive than brand-name Rituxan
- Interchangeable: Can be substituted; insurance often prefers biosimilars
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why do I need premedication before every rituximab infusion?
A: Premedication (Tylenol and Benadryl) dramatically reduces the risk and severity of infusion reactions. Rituximab causes release of cytokines (inflammatory proteins) when it binds to B-cells, especially during the first infusion when there are many B-cells present. This cytokine release causes fever, chills, rigors, and other symptoms in 50-80% of patients during first infusion. Premedication blocks these symptoms. NEVER skip premedication - it's a critical safety measure. Even if you had no reaction to previous doses, continue premedication for every dose.
Q: How long will my first rituximab infusion take?
A: Plan for 5-8 hours total for your first infusion day. This includes: premedication (30-60 min), wait time (30 min), rituximab infusion itself (4-6 hours for first dose - started very slowly and gradually increased), and observation period (30-60 min after). Bring entertainment, snacks, comfortable clothes. Subsequent infusions are usually 2-4 hours once your team knows you tolerate it well. If you're getting other chemotherapy the same day (like CHOP), add another 2-4 hours. It's a long day, but the slow initial rate is important for safety.
Q: I felt terrible during the first infusion - fever, chills, shaking. Is this normal?
A: Yes, unfortunately this is very common with the first rituximab infusion (50-80% of patients experience some reaction). What you're describing sounds like a typical mild-moderate infusion reaction: fever, chills, rigors (shaking), possibly headache, nausea. This happens because massive numbers of B-cells are being killed rapidly, releasing inflammatory proteins (cytokines) into your bloodstream. The good news: subsequent infusions are MUCH better - reactions occur in less than 10% of subsequent doses and are usually milder. Your team should have paused the infusion, given you extra medications, and resumed at a slower rate. If reactions are severe, talk to your doctor about additional premedication or slower infusion rates.
Q: Can I get the flu shot while on rituximab?
A: Yes, but ONLY the inactivated flu shot (injection), NOT the nasal flu vaccine (FluMist) which is live. You should get flu shots while on rituximab because you're at higher risk for infections with B-cell depletion. However, the vaccine may be less effective because your B-cells (which make antibodies) are depleted. Best timing: get vaccinated at least 2 weeks before starting rituximab if possible, or at least 4 weeks after last dose. But if you're in the middle of treatment during flu season, get it anyway - partial protection is better than none. Avoid ALL live vaccines (MMR, varicella, shingles/Zostavax, yellow fever).
Q: Why did I need hepatitis B testing before starting rituximab?
A: Rituximab can cause hepatitis B virus (HBV) to reactivate in people with current or past infection, and this reactivation can be fatal (fulminant hepatitis, liver failure). Even if you had hepatitis B decades ago and "cleared" it, the virus stays dormant in your liver. Rituximab's suppression of B-cells can allow the virus to wake up and replicate uncontrollably. Testing is MANDATORY before starting. If positive, you'll start antiviral medication (entecavir or tenofovir) BEFORE rituximab and continue during treatment and for 12+ months after. This prophylaxis has dramatically reduced HBV reactivation deaths.
Q: How is rituximab different from chemotherapy?
A: Rituximab is a monoclonal antibody (targeted therapy), not traditional chemotherapy. Chemotherapy drugs kill all rapidly dividing cells (cancer cells, but also hair follicles, gut lining, bone marrow). Rituximab specifically targets CD20 protein on B-cells only - it's like a guided missile vs. chemotherapy's carpet bombing approach. This means rituximab doesn't cause hair loss, mouth sores, or severe bone marrow suppression on its own. However, it's usually given WITH chemotherapy (R-CHOP), so you'll experience side effects from both. The "R" in R-CHOP is rituximab; the "CHOP" is the chemotherapy part.
Q: Will my immune system recover after rituximab?
A: Yes, but it takes time. Rituximab depletes your B-cells (the cells that make antibodies). B-cells typically start recovering 6-9 months after your last dose and reach normal or near-normal levels by 9-12 months. However, full immune recovery can take 12-18+ months. During this time, you're at increased infection risk. Your oncologist may check immunoglobulin levels (IgG, IgA, IgM) - if severely low with recurrent infections, you may need IVIG (IV immunoglobulin replacement). Most patients fully recover immune function and can fight infections normally again.
Q: Can rituximab cure my lymphoma?
A: It depends on the type. For aggressive lymphomas like DLBCL, R-CHOP cures about 60-70% of patients - meaning the lymphoma never comes back. For indolent (slow-growing) lymphomas like follicular lymphoma, cure is rare but many patients live for decades with excellent disease control, receiving treatment only when needed. CLL is generally not curable but can go into long remissions. Rituximab's impact has been revolutionary - it improved cure rates for DLBCL by 15-20 percentage points. If your lymphoma is potentially curable, rituximab-based treatment gives you the best chance.
Q: What's the difference between IV rituximab and the subcutaneous shot (Rituxan Hycela)?
A: Rituxan Hycela is rituximab given as a subcutaneous injection (under the skin) instead of IV infusion. Major advantage: takes 5-7 minutes instead of 2-6 hours - MUCH more convenient. You MUST receive your first dose IV to ensure you tolerate it (can't stop a subcutaneous injection once given). After that, if your doctor approves, you can switch to SC. Dose is fixed at 1,400 mg regardless of weight (with hyaluronidase enzyme to help absorption). Efficacy is the same. Many patients prefer SC for maintenance therapy. Not all insurance covers it; some require step therapy (try IV first).
Q: I'm scheduled for maintenance rituximab every 2 months for 2 years. Why so long?
A: For follicular lymphoma, the PRIMA trial showed that 2 years of maintenance rituximab (given every 2 months after initial treatment) dramatically extended progression-free survival - from median 4.1 years (observation only) to 10.5 years (with maintenance). That's an extra 6+ years before lymphoma progresses! The mechanism: rituximab continuously depletes any residual lymphoma B-cells before they can grow into detectable disease. While 2 years seems long, the benefit is substantial and side effects are minimal (mostly just infusion reactions, which are usually mild after the first few doses). Many patients tolerate maintenance well.
Living with Rituximab Treatment
Preparing for Infusion Days
- Take premedications: Even if prescribed at home, don't skip
- Hydrate well: Drink plenty of fluids day before and morning of infusion
- Bring entertainment: Books, tablet, headphones - first infusion is long
- Dress comfortably: Layers (infusion centers can be cold)
- Bring snacks: Light foods, crackers, juice
- Arrange transportation: Benadryl makes you drowsy; don't drive yourself home
Infection Prevention
- Hand hygiene: Wash frequently, especially before eating
- Avoid sick people: Stay away from anyone with colds, flu, infections
- Food safety: Avoid raw/undercooked foods, unwashed produce
- Dental care: Good oral hygiene; see dentist before starting treatment if possible
- Vaccinations: Get inactivated vaccines (flu, pneumonia, COVID) - avoid live vaccines
- Fever protocol: Call doctor for ANY fever ≥100.4°F
When to Call Your Doctor
Contact your oncology team immediately for:
- Fever ≥100.4°F (38°C)
- Signs of infection (cough, burning urination, skin redness/warmth)
- Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
- Chest pain or irregular heartbeat
- New neurologic symptoms (confusion, weakness, vision changes, difficulty speaking)
- Jaundice (yellow skin/eyes), dark urine, severe abdominal pain
- Severe skin rash or blistering
- Unusual bleeding or bruising
Support Resources
- Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS): 1-800-955-4572, www.lls.org
- Lymphoma Research Foundation: 1-800-500-9976, www.lymphoma.org
- CLL Society: www.cllsociety.org
- CancerCare: 800-813-4673 (counseling and support)
- American Cancer Society: 1-800-227-2345
Medical Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Rituximab has serious risks including potentially fatal infusion reactions, infections, and viral reactivations. Every patient's situation is unique. Always consult your oncologist and healthcare team about your specific condition, treatment plan, and any questions or concerns you have. If you have a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room immediately.
Sources: This guide is based on FDA prescribing information for Rituxan and biosimilars, National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines for B-cell lymphomas and CLL, landmark clinical trials (GELA LNH-98.5 for DLBCL, PRIMA for follicular lymphoma maintenance, CLL8 for FCR), peer-reviewed medical literature on CD20-directed therapy, and clinical practice guidelines from major cancer centers. Content reviewed for medical accuracy and updated to reflect current standards of care as of 2025.